RISE Germany

Research internships for students in science and engineering

The DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service) offers the RISE Germany program, which gives undergraduate students from North American, British and Irish universities the opportunity to complete a summer research internship at top German universities and research institutions. RISE Germany is funded by the German Federal Foreign Office.

  • Students are matched with a host university or institute according to their area of interest (biology, chemistry, physics, earth sciences, engineering, or a closely related field)
  • DAAD provides students a monthly stipend for three months to help cover living expenses
  • Host universities, universities of applied sciences (UAS), and institutes provide housing assistance and match students with Ph.D. student mentors or researchers (UAS only)
  • German language proficiency is not required--the working language will be English
Student Story|Chase Vogeli, Mathematics '20

Chase Vogeli, Mathematics '20

At the university, I worked in the research group of Professor Roland Speicher, which broadly studied the mathematical fields of free probability and random matrix theory. The Speicher group participated in the German Research Foundation’s Sonderforschungsgebiet (special research area) 195 “Symbolic Tools in Mathematics and their Application,” a collaborative research center between several universities, which provided funding for my project.

My project concerned an application of the mathematical field of graph theory to a problem that arose in my mentor’s research. He was interested in studying the situation when a graph has so-called quantum symmetry, an important concept in the rising field of quantum information theory. Along with some other researchers, he had developed an algorithm which could potentially detect these special quantums symmetric in a given graph, but it only works for a restricted class of graphs that had not been studied before. I was able to apply my mathematics coursework, in particular the class 18.212 Algebraic Combinatorics, to prove several properties of this special class of graphs. Additionally, I used my commutation skills from my CI-M classes to deliver a talk on the work I had done in a research seminar at Universität des Saarlandes.

Spending the summer doing math research in Germany with the DAAD RISE program was an opportunity to both gain relevant experience in a field of interest as well as travel to a part of the world I had long wanted to see. The whole experience not only expanded my worldview but also influenced my future career path, inspiring me to consider attending graduate school in Germany.

Back to top